22 July 2025
PEPE is back in the spotlight. A massive surge in Google search activity on July 22 sent the memecoin to the top of the trending list.
Data from Google Trends showed interest in PEPE spiking from 25 to a perfect 100, indicating a massive 300% surge – the highest possible level of search popularity. It was short-lived but loud. For tokens that thrive on hype, moments like this can be fuel—or fire.
Google Trend Spike Hints At Speculation Pressure
According to analysts tracking memecoin chatter, this kind of surge in online curiosity can be both a blessing and a warning. On one hand, spikes in search interest often precede price movements as new buyers jump in.
On the other, it can mark the top of a wave, right before it crashes. For PEPE, community-driven excitement is a known driver.
Past crypto cycles show that when attention hits extremes, prices often follow. But what follows that is less predictable. Sharp reversals aren’t rare, especially in volatile memecoins.
Trading volume data revealed that sellers were in control during the two days leading up to the current rally. Now, buy-side pressure is returning, and bulls are trying to hold the line.
Breaking The Downtrend And What’s Next
On-chain charts show something else happened this month. PEPE broke its long-term downtrend from December 9, 2024. The token double-bottomed at $0.00000568 in March.
Then on July 10, it pierced the trendline for the first time. It didn’t stop there—PEPE retested that breakout five days later. If the price holds above $0.00000568, the next likely target is $0.000016, last seen in Q4 2024.
But crypto doesn’t make promises. A break below that line could trap recent buyers and drag the price sideways or lower. For now, this is a make-or-break moment for traders watching closely.
Whales Play Their Hand
Meanwhile, whales are making noise of their own. Onchain Lens reported that a trader pocketed $538,500 after exiting long positions on PEPE and Ethereum.
The network’s health isn’t sending clear signals either. The NVT ratio was 41 at last check, indicating low transaction activity compared to market value.
It dropped 30% in one day—a red flag, perhaps, if activity doesn’t pick up. What comes next may depend less on charts and more on timing.
Featured image from Meta, chart from TradingView